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Trump praises Venezuela's good relations, but says oil magnate Sargeant doesn't represent US

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that Harry Sargeant III, a billionaire energy entrepreneur and Republican donor who is a Republican donor to the U.S. government has no authority to act for them. He also added that relations between Venezuela and?the U.S. had been "extraordinary."

"He has no authority to act for the United States of America in any way, shape, or form. Neither does anyone else who is not approved by State Department." Trump stated in a Truth Social post that without this approval, nobody is authorized to represent the United States of America. He was apparently referring to an article published by The Wall Street Journal on Wednesday.

According to four sources, it was reported in January that Sargeant, his team, and the Trump administration were advising on how to engineer the return of American oil companies to Venezuela, even though Sargeant claimed he wasn't a formal advisor.

Trump said Washington "deals?very well? with Venezuelan interim president Delcy Rodriguez," praising Secretary Marco Rubio and other U.S. officials.

"Relations between Venezuela and the United States were, to put it mildly - extraordinary!" Trump wrote in his blog. "But we only speak for ourselves and do not want there to any confusion or misrepresentation."

Sargeant is a Republican donor and Trump's golf buddy. He has longstanding connections to Venezuela's petroleum industry.

Sargeant has been working in Venezuela since the 1980s. His businesses there buy and sell asphalt that can be produced from heavy crude oil. He has also invested heavily in the production of several of the country's oilfields.

He said he had a history of dealings with senior Venezuelan officials including Rodriguez and the?U.S. ousted President Nicolas Maduro. He has been reported to have discussed the need for U.S. officials to invest in Venezuela's oil-infrastructure with him.

Sargeant said that in February 2025 he helped to broker a meeting with special U.S.?envoy Richard Grenell, in which the two discussed deportation and repatriation of migrants to Venezuela, as well as the release of American prisoner and the possibility of the U.S. extending a license to Chevron for operations in Venezuela.

(source: Reuters)